Alexander Baring

Profile & Legacies Summary

27th Oct 1774 - 13th May 1848

Claimant or beneficiary

Biography

Politician and financier, created 1st Baron Ashburton 10/04/1835. Member of the Privy Council from 1834.

Second son of Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet (1740-1810) and of Harriet, daughter of William Herring. His grandfather John Baring (1697–1748) emigrated from Germany and established the family in England.

Brought up in his father's business; became partner at Hope & Co., Amsterdam bank founded c.1720 and with, among other things, important West Indian connections. Marriage in 1796 of Alexander’s sister, Dorothy, 3rd daughter of Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet (1740-1810) to Pierre Cesar Labouchere, partner in the firm helped to join the two firms of Barings and Hope.

Alexander sent to the USA for various land deals and formed wide connections with American houses. In 1810, by his father's will, he became head of the family firm. In 1811, when Henry Hope died, he merged the London offices of Hope & Co. into Baring Brothers & Co.

Politically: see Political legacies

Trustee of the British Museum and of the National Gallery; Privy Councillor; D.C.L. He published, besides several speeches, An Enquiry into the Causes and Consequences of ... Orders in Council (1808), and The Financial and Commercial Crisis Considered (1847).

Portrait, a Mezzotint, is by Charles Edward Wagstaff (Engraver, 1808-1850) after Sir Thomas Lawrence, published 1837.
From the National Portrait Gallery: NPG D7396

The portrait (c.1810) by Sir Thomas Lawrence which this was based on is in the possession of ING Barings, London and is reproduced in the entry for Baring in the Oxford DNB.

Sources

T71/887 British Guiana claim no. 2282 (Spring Garden) shows the counterclaim by the then current partners of Barings. Alexander Baring had formally withdrawn from the partnership in 1830. T71/879 St Kitts claim nos. 206, 336 and 724.

John Orbell, ‘Baring, Alexander, first Baron Ashburton (1773–1848)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2004); online edn, Jan 2008 Oxford DNB accessed 06/08/2012; William D. Rubinstein, Who were the rich? A biographical dictionary of British wealth-holders Volume Two 1840-1859 (London, Social Affairs Unit, 2012) reference 1848/6; D. R. Fisher (ed.), The House of Commons 1820-1832 (7 vols., Cambridge, Cambridge University Press for the History of Parliament Trust, 2009), vol. 4. Contemporary obituaries include Gentleman's Magazine (July 1848), pp. 89-91 though this says nothing of his West India interests or attitudes to slavery.

Further Information

Absentee?

British/Irish

Spouse

Anne Louisa: daughter of US statesman William Bingham, of Philadelphia, 23 August 1798